A Narco-Terrorist State

By Rodrigo Acuña

New Matilda

18 April 2007

A recent article by Paul Richter and Greg Miller in the Los Angeles Times has again brought international attention on Colombian President Álvaro Uribe Vélez. At the centre of the LATimes
article is a leaked report from the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
which claims that Colombian army chief General Mario Montoya and a
paramilitary group carried out an operation against Marxist rebels in
2002, that left 14 people dead and ‘dozens more disappeared in its
aftermath’.

Given the nature of the activities of
paramilitary groups in Colombia and Uribe’s ‘long and close
association’ with Montoya, the revelation adds to a scandal which,
Richter and Miller say, ‘already has implicated the country’s former
Foreign Minister, at least one State Governor, legislators and the head
of the national police’.

Uribe and his Government have long
been beyond the pale. His close relationships with Colombia’s drug
cartels and paramilitaries run so deep that political scientists should
seriously consider categorising Colombia as a ‘narco-terrorist State’ —
with strong backing from Washington, of course. (As Richter and Miller
point out: ‘President Bush called Uribe a "personal friend" … during
[last month’s] visit to Bogotá, and his Government is one of the Bush
Administration’s closest allies in Latin America’.)

The history of the current Colombian President is ghastly. His papá,
Alberto Uribe Sierra, did not set Álvaro a good example. During the
1970s, Uribe Sierra lived in a middle-class neighbourhood in the
Colombian city of Medellín and was heavily in debt. However, as Forrest
Hylton notes in his excellent history, Evil Hour in Colombia,
by a ‘strange reversal of fortune’ Uribe Sierra became a ‘political
broker, real-estate intermediary, and recognised trafficker’.

Having
also become a huge cattle rancher, Uribe Sierra was part of a group of
narco-speculators who purchased cheap land where Left-wing guerrillas
were active. In 1983, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia — the
guerrilla group commonly known by their Spanish acronym FARC
— decided to pay Uribe Sierra a visit and he was killed after a failed
kidnapping attempt. When the younger Uribe became aware of his father’s
death, according to Hylton, he flew to his father’s ranch in the
private helicopter of Medellín’s cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar.

Escobar
and Uribe Sierra had become good friends after the latter had been
involved in ‘fund raising’ for a project known as ‘Medellín without
slums’ — most likely another one of Escobar’s countless scams to
launder his huge empire’s drug money.

Álvaro Uribe entered
politics at the age of 26 when he was elected mayor of Medellín in 1982
— a payback for his father helping finance the campaign of Belisario
Betancur, President of Colombia from 1982 to 1986. Sacked after three
months for what Tom Feiling writing in New Internationalist termed his ‘ties to the drug Mafia’, Uribe then became Director of Civil Aviation and ‘issued pilots’ licences to Pablo Escobar’s fleet of light aircraft flying cocaine to Florida’. Feiling goes on to report that:

'In
1995 Uribe became Governor of his home province of Antioquia …
[P]rivate security services and paramilitary death squads enjoyed
immunity from prosecution under Governor Uribe and were free to launch
a campaign of terror. Thousands of trade unionists, students and human
rights workers were murdered, disappeared or driven out of the
province.'

'The
director of the nation’s secret service, DAS, Jorge Noguera, is in
prison for his participation in paramilitary crimes … All the
Congresspeople who have gone to prison already are Uribistas
[supporters of Uribe]. Of the 19 in line for judgement, 17 are
Uribistas … The organisation ARCOIRIS, with 83 congresspeople from
paramilitary-controlled zones — 90 per cent are Uribistas. This is not
to say that all Uribistas are [paramilitaries], but it does say the
phenomenon is that these are friends of the President. This is
understood in the exterior, and Democratic Senators in the US like
McGovern and Leahy have noticed as much. Leahy said in [the Colombian
newspaper] El Tiempo that the US Government must correct its
support for Uribe. Leahy said ‘someone explain to me who we are working
with in Colombia’.

We in the PDA insist that these are
political, not just penal, responsibilities for Uribe. He has to
explain why so many of his friends are involved. And we also want to
know how far is the US involved? The US Embassy is full of CIA, DEA,
FBI, and they don’t have any idea what is happening with
paramilitarism? It is not credible.'

In an article published in the January edition of NACLA Report on the Americas
— a distinguished journal on Latin American studies — Colombian
economist and human rights worker, Héctor Mondragón, notes that: ‘Never
before have drug traffickers had so much power in Colombia’. Using the
Government’s own statistics, Mondragón argues
that in 2005 over $US3 billion entered the country with no record of
its origin, and this is ‘just a portion of the billions of dollars and
euros that the paramilitaries have laundered’. In his view, the Bush
Administration is well aware of these actions, but prefers to turn a
blind eye as:

'Colombia
is becoming the eternal battleground, in order to secure the country as
a base of operations for controlling Ecuador, Venezuela and possibly
even Peru, Brazil and Bolivia. They say, ‘Have patience with Colombia;
we’re heading to Venezuela and Ecuador! Be patient with Iraq; we’re on
our way to Iran’.'

If one considers how Ronald
Reagan and Bush senior’s Administrations supported the Contras — also
deeply involved in the drug trade — to overthrow the Sandinistas in
Nicaragua during the 1980s, then such developments are not without
precedent. And remember that Colombian paramilitaries were used in 2004
to try to overthrow the Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.

The
current involvement in the drug trade by the Colombian cartels,
paramilitaries and their political allies such as Uribe, of course,
overshadow the relationship FARC has with cocaine and their own human
rights abuses. Although FARC’s involvement with drugs is ‘hard to
measure’ according to expert Mario Murillo in his book Colombia and the United States: War, Unrest and Destabilisation,
their involvement is ‘still seen as a small percentage of the overall
amounts of money exchanged globally in the international drug market’.

And
anyway, since the 1980s according to numerous reports, between 75-85
per cent of all human rights violations have been carried out by the
Colombian military and their paramilitary allies, with the rest
attributed to the guerrillas. While FARC and ELN should certainly be
held accountable for violations against civilians, their record pales
in comparison to the brutal and systematic crimes of the Colombian
State.

Whether the current
crisis will see Uribe resign or call new elections is unclear, but if
Bush is remotely serious about the ‘War on Terror’ and the ‘War on
Drugs’, then he could start by dealing with his amigo in Bogotá.